149 N.E. 241 | Ill. | 1925
The Appellate Court for the Second District affirmed a judgment of the county court of DuPage county convicting Mike Minto and John Rose upon two counts of an information, the first of which charged them with selling intoxicating liquor in the county of DuPage, and the second with keeping intoxicating liquor for sale in that county while it was prohibition territory, and the record has been brought here for review by means of a writ of error.
It will be unnecessary to consider any of the numerous errors assigned except that which challenges the sufficiency of the information.
The two counts upon which the defendants were convicted merely charged, one, that the defendants "did then and there unlawfully sell intoxicating liquor," and the other that they "did then and there again unlawfully keep for sale intoxicating liquor." We have held that counts in these words do not state facts sufficient to constitute a public offense. (People v. Martin,
In a supplemental opinion of the Appellate Court it is stated that after its original opinion had been filed, but before it was publicly announced, counsel for the plaintiffs in error asked leave to file authorities relative to the sufficiency of the information. It is stated that the abstract filed in the Appellate Court did not contain the information, that no motion was made in the trial court to quash it, and the question of its sufficiency was not discussed or mentioned in the original brief filed by the plaintiffs in error in the Appellate Court. It is further stated that the rules of the Appellate Court require the abstract to fully present every exception relied upon and will be taken to be sufficient for a full understanding of the question presented for decision, and that it has been repeatedly held that the abstract must be so complete as to fully set out the error relied upon and sufficient for a determination of the case without an examination of the record itself. The same is true of the rules of this court, and we have held that a point presented for the first time in the reply brief of the plaintiff in error will not ordinarily receive consideration. We have also held that since no waiver or consent of the defendant to a criminal prosecution or estoppel against him can confer jurisdiction or authorize his conviction in the absence of an accusation charging him with a violation of the criminal law, the court will not affirm a judgment where the defendant was charged with no offense against the law, when that fact is brought to its attention, though the defendant should not, either in the trial court or the court of review, object on that ground.People v. Wallace, supra.
The Appellate Court should have reversed the judgment of the county court. The judgments of both courts will be reversed.
Judgment reversed. *297